C++ keyword cleanliness, mostly auto-generated
This patch renames symbols that happen to have names which are reserved keywords in C++. Most of this was generated with Tromey's cxx-conversion.el script. Some places where later hand massaged a bit, to fix formatting, etc. And this was rebased several times meanwhile, along with re-running the script, so re-running the script from scratch probably does not result in the exact same output. I don't think that matters anyway. gdb/ 2015-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Rename symbols whose names are reserved C++ keywords throughout. gdb/gdbserver/ 2015-02-27 Tom Tromey <tromey@redhat.com> Pedro Alves <palves@redhat.com> Rename symbols whose names are reserved C++ keywords throughout.
This commit is contained in:
parent
3bc3d82a00
commit
fe978cb071
99 changed files with 1140 additions and 1127 deletions
|
@ -284,14 +284,14 @@ unop_user_defined_p (enum exp_opcode op, struct value *arg1)
|
|||
situations or combinations thereof. */
|
||||
|
||||
static struct value *
|
||||
value_user_defined_cpp_op (struct value **args, int nargs, char *operator,
|
||||
value_user_defined_cpp_op (struct value **args, int nargs, char *oper,
|
||||
int *static_memfuncp, enum noside noside)
|
||||
{
|
||||
|
||||
struct symbol *symp = NULL;
|
||||
struct value *valp = NULL;
|
||||
|
||||
find_overload_match (args, nargs, operator, BOTH /* could be method */,
|
||||
find_overload_match (args, nargs, oper, BOTH /* could be method */,
|
||||
&args[0] /* objp */,
|
||||
NULL /* pass NULL symbol since symbol is unknown */,
|
||||
&valp, &symp, static_memfuncp, 0, noside);
|
||||
|
@ -308,7 +308,7 @@ value_user_defined_cpp_op (struct value **args, int nargs, char *operator,
|
|||
return value_of_variable (symp, 0);
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
error (_("Could not find %s."), operator);
|
||||
error (_("Could not find %s."), oper);
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
/* Lookup user defined operator NAME. Return a value representing the
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Add table
Add a link
Reference in a new issue